The news in this publi cation is released for the press on receipt. THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA NEWS LETTER Published Weekly by the. University of North Caro lina for its University Ex tension Division. JANUARY 25, 1922 CHAPEL HIIL, N. G. VOL. VIII, NO. 10 Editorial Board . 1!. 0. Branson, S. H. Hobbs, Jr., L. R. V7ilson, B. W. Knieht, D. D. Carrolb'J. B. BuUltl, H. W. Odum. Entered as second-class matter November 14,191-1, at tbe Postofflee at Chapel Hill, N. 0., under the act of Angnst 24, 1912. IMPaOVEB COUNTY GOVEEKMENT COUNTY GOVEMMENT One of the subjects for discussion at the morning session of the Press Asso ciation at Winston-Salem the other day was better business methods in county government. The newspaper men can well afford to devote ^ome time to this topic. The county is the unit of gov ernment in North Carolina. There are exactly one hundred such units. The whole is no better than its parts. The government of North Carolina will never be much superior to the govern ment of these one hundred units. Those who have dug into the matter find th|.t conditions in most of the coun ties are far from encouraging. Some time ago Dr. E. C. Brooks brought forcefully to the attention of the peo ple of the state the weakness of our present system of county government. The conditions he brought to light, es pecially in regard to county finances, have set thoughtful citizens to thinking. That this is true is shown by the fact that the Press Association has- taken up the subject as one of the few which it will have time to consider at its busi ness session in Winston-Salem. What are conditions?' We have them best stated by the State Auditor, who is in better position than anybody else in North Carolina to know just what sort of shape the average county gov 2. The Legislature of 1921, regular session, passed a bill that is far-reach ing in its scope and should prove highly beneficial in its operation. This bill does two things that never before have been done in North Carolina. It re quires that every county in the state shall be audited and a proper system of accounting installed. And it provides for this work to be done by a central agency—the State Auditor. The bill in its entirety may be found in Chapter 236, Public Laws of 1921. Section 1 reads as follows: “That it shall be the duty of the State Auditor to cause to be examined at least once a year! and oftener if in the judg ment of the State Auditor conditions require, all counties and county officers receiving or disbursing public funds, and that such State Auditor be and he | is hereby given full power to examine all accounts and ail oflicial affairs of every county office and officer receiving or disbursing public funds.” A Press Program Now, what can the newspapers of the State do to help apply the remedies which the General Assembly has here provided? There arc, vee think, three big things that can be dene: 1. They can build a fire, and a hot one if necessary, under couiily auLhor- ernment is in today. After examining ities that do not comply promptly and i the records of many counties State Au- efficiently with the provision of the , ditor Durham is moved to ask the ques- Sams Bill requiring them to furnish the , tion: “Are there private corporations State Auditor accurate information as, whose business is conducted as is the to bonded indebtedness and finances of public business?” “Yes, indeed,” he their county. answers, “but their names are carved, 2. The newspapers can and should deep in the records of the bankruptcy back the State Auditor to tfie utter- courts and some of their directors and most limit in his efforts to examine at officers are doing time.” | least once a year the books of all coun- The Auditor frankly states that there 1 ties and should support him in every are few counties in this state that' possible manner in this gigantic under know their true financial condition.taking. There are a great many, he declares, | 3. And last and most important of all, that do not know their bonded indebt-; newspapers should use all the in- edness, who holds the bonds, nor when ' fluence at their command to have com- j they are due, when the interest is due, ' petent and efficient men drafted, if ne-' when they are to be paid, or how. | cessary, to serve on Boards of County Moreover, he says that few counties Commissioners. No county can get far know the number of acres of land with- without men of ability and integrity as in their borders, nor the valuation of - commissioners, especially in this new each, neither do they know the number ^j^y in the state's history when the of town lots. He proves this statement counties are called upon to spend so by the fact that the reports coming in-1 j^uch money on roads and schools and to his office every year vary, and in hospitals and other public improve- some instances greatly, as to the num-1 ments. ber of acres and the number of town] There is in all'the Commonwealth to- lots. Few counties, he tells us, have a I jj^portant office than that control set of books tnrough which all ■ County Commissioner. Upon the effii- financial items pass. Few know what ^jg^cy and integrity of these County it costs them to conduct their business, goards depends, in large part, the suc- or whether the price is high or low. ! government in North Caro- And few know whether they buy at iina._Santford Martin, in the Winston- KNOW NOSTH CASOLINA Under this heading last week was given the concluding words of Gov ernor Bickett’s inaugural address five years ago. Before taking up messages from living North Carolin ians, we turn this week to the con cluding words of Governor Aycock’s last-prepared speech ten years ago. AYCOCK’S DREAM We have indeed gone far in North Carolina. A recent writer has de clared that the progress of a state may be determined by the things which are now done as a matter of course which used to be the subject of debate. Tested by this standard North Carolina has advanced rapidly. The right of every child to a pub lic school education is no longer a subject of controversy, but is ac knowledged by everyone. Tne duty a.ud wisdom of adequate, excellent public roads is not only acknnwlpdiTpd everybody but has recently been emphasized by the mud Ihroagh which we have slowly dragged ourselves to the markets of tliC £>iuuO. Tne right of children to be safe guarded in the time of their growth and development against overwork in factories, is a right which^no one now disputes. The duty of caring’for the afflict ed, whether due to age or infirmity, has been translated into so beautiful an application and has been per formed with such steadiness as to render one who would now deny it contemptible in the sight of all the people. And no more does anyone, what ever may be his view about the effi cacy of prohibition, ever expect to see again the dominance of the bar room and whiskey still in the civic and political life of this great State of ours. We are entering upon a new day— the day of equality of opportunity. EQUAL! That is the word! On that word I plant myself and my party—the equal right of every child born on earth to have the opportu nity ‘to burgeon out all there is with in him.' kind of illiteracy that keeps the thinking on childish levels about public finance—local, state, and national, about public taxation and tax principles, about debt and interest rates, about banks and banking, bank machinery, bank 'Methods, bank services to the public, bank charges, and so on and on. ! We are quoting from memory, but j these are substantially the things Mr. ! Vanderlip said several years ago to a j popular audience in the West. I We are recalling these things just ; now because we want to give wide- i spread publicity to a little volume on I Banking and Business Ethics, by Wal- I ter E. Borden, former cashier andvice- I president of the Wayne National Bank, i Goldsboro—a little volume of 224 pages, : published by the Rand McNally Com- 1 pany, Chicago. It ought to be a text in every high work out such a program it seems clear that no service on behalf of the public good in North Carolina at the present time can be more fundamental or con crete than the state and county pro grams of Public Welfare. Social Ser vice and the Public Good are the goals which the State Department of Public Welfare seeks to attain through effec tive organization and service. It is therefore fitting that the Social Ser vice department of the Women’s Clubs should set itself to this large and defi nite task, a task to which the State Federation has already pledged itself in its platform endorsing Mrs. Clarence A. Johnson as Commissioner of Public Welfare. The selection, therefore, of a limited number of topics to which special efforts will be given during the j^ear, ought to prove of great interest ■ school in the state. The freshman class | and value to the many members of wo of every college the country over ought' men's clubs everywhere in the state. ' to have a chance at it. But more than j xhe subjects chosen are: The Meaning ' this, the average man in the mass* in ; of Social Service and Social Work, The America ought to know at least as ■ Meaning of Public Welfare, The North much about banking and business ethics ' Carolina Plan of Public Welfare, The as this little volume can teach him. County Superintendent of Public Wel- ' It attempts to do nothing but give ' fare,'Social Treatment of Crime, Con- the abe’s of banking in the very sim-! structive Help of the Poor, Care of plest language, but it is knowledge Neglected and Dependent Children, that the average man—farmer, teach-, Community Organization, The North er, preacher, wage-earner, what not— needs almost as certainly as high school seniors. The charm of the book lies in its sim plicity, competency, and rare literary craftsmanship. Not many business men are equal to book-making of this high order. The schools would be better if more business men could find time to write business texts on the practical matters of every-day life. What the business men are slow to do in text book writing of this kind, teachers and college professors are obliged to under take. They often succeed, but they more often fail. Business men will have a smaller chance to criticise the schools when they write more of the books the schools ought to use. PUBLIC WELFARE BULLETIN right prices when they purchase. Compulsory Auditing This is a brief statement of the pres ent state of affairs in most of our coun ties. This does not apply, however, to counties like Forsyth which have whole- Salem Journal. SHABBY cmZENSHIP The failures of democracy are the failures of citizens to *play their part, timreounty auditors whose duty it is to | The governing departments belong to keep a control set of books and to tabu-i us. Their successes are ours; their late and maintain up to date at all times mistakes disgrace us. the information which the State Audi tor says is lacking in most counties. But a vast majority of the counties of North Carolina do not have whole-time auditors. Many of the smaller county units never will have. Some other way must be found to get them out of the woods. We believe the way has been found. As a result of recent acts of the Legis lature we expect vast improvement in the financial affairs of most of the coun ties of North Carolina within the next two or four years. What are the rem edies that are to be applied? Specifi cally there are two: 1. The Sams Bill—that was intro duced by Senator Sams of Forsyth in the late special session of the General Assembly- It requires all counties to file with the State Auditor at regular intervals the exact information which Auditor Durham says is now lacking. When the provisions of this bill shall have been complied with the auditor will have at his fingers’ tips at all times the data on the financial condition of every county in North Carolina, includ ing bonded indebtedness and date when Think what a board of health might accomplish if the citizens made an ef fort to work wholeheartedly with it. Think what a street-cleaning depart ment might be in a city where every inhabitant felt as responsible for the sidewalk and street in front of his property as for his parlor floor! Think of the quality a community might acquire with a school system which was the pride and anxious con cern of every parent in the city! Where are the members of the com munity who might have leisure and money to band their fellows together and work unresistingly with the public officials to build the City Beautiful? In most of our cities the government, though often inefficient and unenlight ened, is not corrupt, or beyond the in fluence of the citizens who have no pri vate axe to grind. The worst failures are due to the fact that, as soon as the officials are elected, the public forgets all about them and leaves them to the companionship of the few who come to abuse and the many who come to get some favor for themselves or their friends. Citizens have no one except NEW HANOVER LEADS The city of Wilmington and the coun ty of New Hanover more than ten years ago realized the tremendous importance of local hospitals for local victims of tuberculosis. The local Red Cross chap ter placed this matter before the two ! governments. A very commodious hos- I pital was provided largely as a result ' of the work of the local Red Cross. Both the city and county readily agreed to make appropriations for the support of the institution. This custom has been continued on an annual basis ever since and the money appropriated has been well invested. Both white and colored patients have been cared for in the local tuberculosis hospital for the last ten or twelve years and a splendid work for the relief of suffering human ity has been accomplished. Our present county government headed by Mr. Addison Hewlett and our board of city commissioners of which Major Jas. H. Cowan is head are displaying keen interest in the mainte nance and up-keep of the hospital. We thought you would be interested to know that our locality more than a decade ago took the step suggested in the News Letter of Dec. 7, 1921, as a j necessary humanitarian movement in every county of the state.—Louis T. Moore, Secretary, Wilmington Chamber of Commerce. The University of North Carolina through its School of Public Welfare and Bureau of Public Discussion has just issued a little bulletin on Social Service and Public Welfare. In coop eration with Mrs. S. C. Sitterson, chair man of the department of Social Ser vice, State Federation of Women’s Clubs, the bulletin has been sent to va rious workers throughout the state. State and Connty Studies Concerning the Federation program, the bulletin says: The plan of the So cial Service department of the State Federation of Women’s Clubs for 1921 to provide a program which will empha size the fundamental aspects of social service, and at the same time give ex pression to concrete activities, is a most commendable one. In the effort to' wards. interest is due and what provision has I themselves to thank if an official, left been made for paying off bonds when j mercies of the self-seeking, be- they mature. Moreover, the bill re- j ^^j^es careless in self-defense or cor- quires that every county issuing bonds, throurt evil associations.-C. J. must make provision for their retire- tniougn c nient. 1 Cannon, in the Atlantic Monthly. ECONOMIC ILLITERACY The most alarming illiteracy in Amer- I ica, said Mr. Vanderlip, the former I president of the National City Bank of * New York, is economic illiteracy Carolina State Conference for Social Service, together with Practical Aids. The Social Hind With reference to Social Service, the Bulletin says: Perhaps there is no tend- I ency in modern times more clearly de fined or making more substantial pro gress than that of social service. This means, simply, that in the fields of re ligion, education, social science, poli tics, and perhaps in all the social rela tionships, the fact is being recognized that the highest good and the"greatest service may be attained through the de velopment of the individual in service to society and his fellowman. In terms of moral sanction it means that they who live unto themselves live in vain; in terms of social welfare it means that the individual who neglects the develop ment of his social nature, or who grows rich upon society to its hurt, or who uses the public moneys for personal gain, is the greatest of social offenders. The growth of social consciousness is in evidence on every hand; in the ideals of government and civic righteousness; in the increased activities of women in constructive social work; in the crea tion of a national welfare conscience; in the broadening instruction of schools, colleges and universities; in the crea tion of special schools and departments of social service administration within universities, as the School of Social Ser vice Administration in the University of Chicago or the School of Public Wel fare at Carolina, or the Pennsylvania School for Social Service. It is very ' clear, therefore, that the promotion of social service and the training for com- ' munity leadership constitute an impor- ; tant undertaking rich in substantial re- FARMS USING GAS OR ELECTSIC LIGHT IN U. S. States ranked according to ratio of farms reporting gas or electric light to all farms in the several states. Based on reports of the 1920 Census, as pub lished in the Federal Monthly Crop Reporter Nov. 1921. N In the United States at large 452,809 farms or 7 percent of all farms re ported use of gas or electric light. In North Carolina 8,005 or 3 percent of the farms were thus equipped, and 38 states made a better showing. Department of Rural Social Science, University of North Carolina Rank Stafe Pet. of all farms No. using gas or elec tric light Rank State Pet. of all farms No. using gas or elec tric light 1 Utah .43.4 11,125 26 Michigan 8.0 15,695 2 Massachusetts.. .28.3 9,062 26 Minnesota 7.6 13,539 3 California .25.9 30,519 27 Maryland 7.0 3,330 4 Connecticut .17.6 3,963 28 Colorado 6.5 3,926 5 Rhode Island ... .17.1 700 29 Arizona .6.0 592 6 Iowa .15.3 32,552 30 North Dakota .... .6.8 4,618 6 -New Jersey .15.3 4,551 31 Missouri .5.6 14,341 8 Pennsylvania ... .15.2 30,669 32 Wyoming 4.,6 717 9 West Virginia... .14.8 12,900 33 Virginia 4.2 7,874 10 Ohio .14.7 37,746 34 Delaware .3.9 397 11 Idaho .14.2 5,982 35 Florida 3.8 2,042 12 Washington .... .13.8 9,178 36 Oklahoma 3.7 7,010 13 New York .12.9 24,882 37 Montana 3.6 2,013 14 15 .12.2 385 38 Alabama 3.3 8,345 Vermont .11.4 3,328 39 North Carolina 3.0 8,005 16 New Hampshire .11.3 2,322 40 South Carolina ... .2.7 5,170 17 Oregon .10.9 6,463 41 Kentucky .2.2 5,925 18 Indiana .10.0 20,584 42 Texas .1.9 8,228 19 Illinois . 9.8 23,273 42 Georgia 1.9 5,826 20 Nebraska . 9.7 12,062 44 Tennessee 1.8 4,554 21 Maine . 9.6 4,625 45 New Mexico 1.4 422 22 Wisconsin . 8.8 16,574 46 Louisiana .1.1 1,471 23 Kansas . 8.7 14,380 46 Mississippi 1.1 2,896 24 South Dakota.. . 8.6 .6,445 43 Arkansas .1.1 2(643